Christmas Contest + Christmas Social and Serving Ideas

As we move into our winter Community Group break, we would encourage your group to stay connected before our new group trimester begins on January 14th. 

The holiday season can be a challenging time as many of us interact with broken families, as we are reminded of friends and family that are no longer with us, as we face unique temptations, and as we deal with the anxiety that comes along with this season.

Group may be on break, but our relationships shouldn't. In fact, we may need each other during the holidays more than ever. 

As you celebrate the holidays, we'd love for your group to participate in our Community Group Christmas Contest by sharing your group experience with us and your friends.

Community Group Christmas Contest

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Post a Christmas picture on Facebook or Instagram with your Community Group between December 10th-23rd using hashtag #ChristmasWithMyGroup and tagging @NorthridgeRoc.

We will have 3 prizes. Your group can win one of the following categories by being the group with the: 

1. Most Creative Post

2. Most People Included in a Picture

3. Most Liked Post

So, start planning now for how your group can win.

What are some Christmas ideas for your group to connect together?

10 Group Christmas Ideas

  • Have a gingerbread house building contest with hot cocoa and Christmas music.

  • Watch a Christmas movie like "Elf," "It's A Wonderful Life," or "The Nativity."

  • Make and give away Christmas cookies.

  • Go caroling.

  • Get outdoors - skiingsleddinghiking, or have a snowball fight.

  • Go ice skating downtown.

  • Bring your kids to see Santa at the mall and grab a meal together.

  • Attend a Christmas concert.

  • Sit together at the Christmas Eve service (see times HERE).

  • Serve together (See ideas below).

Connect with your co-leaders and set a date on your calendar this weekthen you can start brainstorming with your group what your Christmas celebrations might look like.

Looking for a serving Idea?

7 Group Serving Opportunities

  • Open Door Mission

    Fill out a volunteer inquiry form for Open Door Mission to find out more about their seasonal serving opportunities. https://opendoormission.com/getinvolved/

  • Basketball Tournament

    Youth For Christ is hosting a Christmas basketball tournament and can use volunteers to help run the event and participate. www.northridgeserves.com/blog/trunk-or-treat-and-a-christmas-basketball-tournament

  • Christmas Basket Giveaway

    Mission Share has Christmas related service opportunities such as their Christmas basket giveaways and their Christmas Hope Gifts Program. Northridger Patrick can help you find out more details and connect: www.northridgeserves.com/our-team/patrick

  • Pack Hygiene Kits

    Pack hygiene bags for Supports on the Streets or hygiene/cleaning kits for Genesis House with a Christmas themed twist (such as including Christmas cards for those receiving the bags). Contact Allie for Supports on the Streets (http://www.northridgeserves.com/our-team/homelessness) and Leanne for Genesis House (http://www.northridgeserves.com/our-team/youth).

  • Christmas Carols and Cookies for neighbors

    You can put together some cookies or other goodies as a group and pass them out to your neighbors and optionally sing Christmas carols too.

  • Kids Care For Northridge Youth Ministry

    NYM provides childcare each week on Wednesday nights for our volunteer youth leaders. You and your group can take care of a group of children from infant to 6 years old. Contact Justin Laskowski for more info: jlaskowski@NorthridgeRochester.com 

  • Serve at Northridge

    Contact your Campus Pastor or the Ministry Leader in the area you already serve to find out what opportunities Northridge has for Christmas Eve or the holidays.

Enjoy the break. Get some rest. Have fun connecting. I look forward to seeing your Christmas posts! #ChristmasWithMyGroups

See you January 7th at 5PM for our Group Leader Mid-Year Kickoff and some Outlaw Baked Potatoes!

Jason DeGraaffCommunity Groups PastorLife Is Better Connected

Jason DeGraaff

Community Groups Pastor

Life Is Better Connected

 
 

The Top 2 Things Group Members Wish Were Different About Your Group

Every June we send out an end-of-the-year Community Group survey to all of our Community Group members and leaders.  You have probably filled out one of these surveys. This survey provides valuable feedback so we can improve our group environments.

We take all of the results of the survey and summarize the comments to look for trends we should address.

I wanted to share with you the top 2 issues group attendees wished were different about their group.

#1 - More Social Gatherings

This was the number one thing group members wished was different about their group. 

One of the most significant ways to increase our influence in another person's life is by developing a closer friendship with them.  

We can't be best friends with everyone in group, but the more opportunities we take as a group to connect with each other, the more people will feel like they belong. When belonging grows people are more likely to participate and share what is really happening in their lives.

What is one thing your group can do to develop deeper connections outside of group?

- A guys or girls night or breakfast
- A Thanksgiving dinner
- A Christmas party
- Serving together (www.NorthridgeServes.com)
- Grabbing lunch after Sunday services
- Checking out a local venue like Radio Social

Put a date on your calendar now before the your holiday calendar fills up.

#2 - Starting and Ending On Time

This is the second most common issue that group members wish was different about their group. 

When someone shows up to group and they are unsure when it is going to end, they may be less likely to attend the following week. They may have to get up early for work or school, the kids need to get to bed, they have homework they need to finish up, or maybe they just want to get home to watch their favorite show. Whatever the case, this is a frequent frustration group members feel.

What can you do to better ensure your group starts and ends on time?

- Agree on the starting and ending time and remind your group regularly throughout the trimester.
- Set a schedule for group: When should everyone show up, and when to start and end the icebreaker, group discussion, and prayer time.
- Ask a group member to be a time keeper with the agreed upon schedule.
- Break into smaller prayer groups so you don't need to get through as many prayer requests.
- Try using prayer cards to keep group prayer time focused.

What does your group need to work on? 
What have you found helpful for your group to connect together or start and end on time?  
We'd love to learn from you!  

Jason DeGraaffCommunity Groups PastorLife is Better Connected

Jason DeGraaff

Community Groups Pastor

Life is Better Connected

 

More Resources You May Find Helpful

How to Get the Most Out of Your Prayer Time in Groups

It could be the all-night rambling. Maybe it's the complaining or the disguised gossiping. It might be the avoiding. It's certainly being contributed to by the chatting. And if we don't end on time, we can be relatively certain that those oh-so-spiritually-postured eyelids mean half of the group has fallen asleep.

Have you been frustrated with prayer time in your community group? I sure have. It can be hard as leaders to reign people in and foster God-honoring, sin-stomping, soul-working, growth-producing prayer time. How do we get there?

Enter: Community Group Prayer and Application Cards.

These cards help promote:

  • Spiritual Growth -- We  stay focused on application of the group's discussion and intentional work towards heart-change.

  • Purposeful Prayer -- Our time gets guarded, everyone has a chance to share, and out-loud prayer becomes easier for those new to it.

  • Group Unity -- We have more specific things to pray for and connect with each other about during the week.

How to Use the Prayer and Application Cards:

  1. Fill Them Out

    • When you break for prayer time, hand out the cards and give the group a few minutes to think quietly about how they're going to apply the last question from the group discussion to their lives.

    • Everyone writes their application and how the group can pray for them about it on their card. The space is limited to help people get specific.

    • A Tip from Our Group: We've recently started having everyone add a specific fruit of the Spirit from Galatians 5:22-23 that we want to see God grow in us through our individual life-application. It's been another great way to see continued life-change.

  2. Share and Pray

    • Consider using a timer on a phone to divide up the remaining time and give each person an equal window for sharing.

    • One person shares from their card and then passes their card to the person next to them. That person prays about what's on the card, and can even just read the card out loud as a prayer if praying out loud is challenging for them. Then, it's their turn to share and pass their own card, and the circle continues.

    • A Tip from Our Group: We ask people to keep prayer requests for anyone else (i.e. relatives, friends, or co-workers) in emails and texts throughout the week.

  3. Reserve Comments

    • When others are sharing, ask everyone to hold off on encouragement or advice.

    • Challenge everyone to write down their thoughts, take time later to pray, and listen to the Holy Spirit. Then, they can reach out to that person during the week, instead of at group.

    • A Tip from Our Group: We hand out blank cards right at the beginning of prayer time for this purpose so that everyone has a place ready to write comments down.

  4. Collect the Cards

    • At the end, collect all of the cards.

    • Two suggestions at this point:

      • Send the prayer requests to the group in an email as a reminder of how to keep praying for one another.

      • Distribute one card to each person for focus praying for just one during the week.

    • A Tip from Our Group: Try taking a photo of all of the cards on a phone and texting it to group members, to save time.

From the first week we used these cards, our group started to focus better, to pray more consistently, to recognize deeper growth, and to be careful to honor others. More than anything, the cards have been a catalyst for visible and ongoing life-change, and for many fewer prayer-time naps.

You can download and print copies of the Prayer and Application Cards HERE or bring 3x5 cards for the same purpose.

Becky BennettNorthridge Community Group LeaderAuthor/Blogger: www.tochoosejoy.com

Becky Bennett

Northridge Community Group Leader

Author/Blogger: www.tochoosejoy.com

 

More Resources On Group Prayer

Prayer Dashboard (1 Week Andy Stanley Group Curriculum)

The Prayer Dashboard is designed to help you and your group members to better understand prayer - not for the sake of better understanding, but so that you can connect more deeply with your heavenly Father.

Leading A Meaningful Prayer Time (Group Leader Training Breakout)

How do you make prayer safe for the new person? How do you improve the depth of prayer time? Check out these 10 ideas to develop a more meaningful prayer time.  

How do you get people to show up to group?

Have you ever received the name of a prospective group member who never showed up to your group? Maybe a staff member sent you a name and contact info or someone expressed interest in your group online. You reached out to them, but they never showed up. 

Maybe your group roster has more people who don't show up than people that actually attend. When you arrive to your Community Group, you end up being more discouraged about those who didn't show up than encouraged about those who came. 

So, how do you get prospective group members or the people on your roster to attend? 

While we can't control people or make decisions for them, here are 2 steps that will help move people from your group roster to your living room.

1. Practice the Rule of 3

What is the Rule of 3? It is simply reaching out to prospective group members 3 times, with 3 different contact methods (phone, text, email), over 3 different weeks. 

  • Week 1 - Call within 24-48 hours

    • Strike while the iron is hot before they psych themselves out or convince themselves that joining a group is a bad idea. 

    • It can be nerve racking to call someone on the phone you don't know, but it is a much more engaging and thorough form of communication than an email or a text. Hearing your voice will help them feel more like they know you before they show up for the first time.

    • If they don't answer the phone, leave a voicemail and then send a follow up email with the group details. Less and less people check their voicemail these days, so an email increases the likelihood they hear from you right away.
  • Week 2 - Send an email

    • If you still have not heard from them about attending your group, send them an email with the details about your group and ask if they are still interested. Asking them if they are coming encourages them to take an action step, to respond and hopefully commit.

  • Week 3 - Send a text

    • I am blown away at how many people will never respond to a call or an email, but they will respond to a text almost immediately. For people who never check their voicemail or email, there is a notification sitting on their messaging app awaiting their response.

If they do respond and let you know they plan to attend, encourage them to meet you on Sunday before your next group so they have at least one familiar face their first week of group.

We practice this same Rule of 3 on our Connections Team at Northridge. When people express interest in taking next steps we have found this process very helpful to move them from interest to participation.

2. Share the Load

Make a goal that everyone on your group roster gets a touch every week via a text, call, or in person.

One of the best ways to make sure you are able to effectively connect with the people on your group roster is divide up your roster for shared follow up. 

When you assign each Group Leader several names, it enables you to focus on a few rather than everyone. You may even ask other mature group members to help with follow up. 
 

Neither of these steps guarantees people will show up to your group, but it helps you know you've done your due diligence in reaching out. It also lets group prospects know there is a group for them when they are ready to take that step.

Looking for more ideas? 
 
Listen to the Reaching One breakout on how to find and keep new people.

 

Resources On Sex

As you discussed this past weeks sermon about sex in your group, you may have come across some issues or questions you are not sure how to handle. Below are a few resources you may find helpful. Please contact your coach if we can be of further help.

 
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Jason DeGraaff
Community Groups Pastor
Life is better connected!

3 Keys That Will Grow Your Group Member's Faith

When you look back at the end of the group trimester what difference will being part of your Community Group make for you or your group members?

Community Groups provide a place where followers of Jesus can intentionally rub shoulders to spur each other to grow in our faith. Being part of community is essential to the faith of every follower of Jesus. We can't grow spiritually unless we connect relationally. 

While showing up to group is an important part of shaping and influencing our faith, there are 3 things we as Group Leaders can do to increase our impact and help those in our group become more like Christ.

1. Focus On Your Own Growth

As a Group Leader you set the spiritual tone for your group. The more you love God, the more likely you'll influence those around you to grow in love for God.

None of us have arrived, we all have areas we can grow in intimacy with God and love for others. Your group members are not more likely to grow because you've got it all together; none of us have arrived. They'll grow as you share with them your own struggles, and as they watch you surrender them to God and see God transform you. 

Watching God transform your own life may be the greatest catalyst to transform their own. 

2. Focus On One Person

As we mentioned at our Group Leader Kick-off, as you begin the group year, focus your attention on one person: either one person you can invite to group, you can develop as a leader, you can counsel, or one person you can disciple. 

Don't let the needs of many keep you from doing anything for anyone.

Do for one what you wish you could do for everyone.

Who is your one? Who can you focus your attention on this trimester? What can you do for one person what you wish you could do for everyone in your group? Take a moment to think of one person you can focus on and begin to pray for them and how God might use you to influence them this year.

Miss the Group Leader Kickoff? Want a refresher? Watch here:

3. Focus On One Next Step

One practical step each of us can take at the beginning of each trimester is to focus our attention on one step we can take to grow in our faith and then share it with our group members so they can keep us accountable on taking that next step.

In fact, in our prayer time in group this next week we will include a question to discuss with your group members to identify one area they want to grow this year. Whether it is baptism, serving the church or outside of the church, reading the Bible daily, praying more consistently, replacing a bad habit with a good habit, or giving more generously, we all have steps we can take to be more like Christ.

Make sure to have each person in your group identify a next step they want to take to grow in their faith this fall, have them write it down, and then ask each other throughout the trimester about your progress.

Thanks for creating environments where more people can grow to be more like Jesus. Let us know if you have any questions or any way we can be of help along the way. 

JasonDeGraaff.PNG
 
 
 

Jason DeGraaff
Community Groups Pastor
Life is better connected!

9 Essentials Before Week 1 of Group

We can't wait to begin another year of Community Groups with you!

We, your Group Coaches, had a blast at our Kick-off training last night as we prepared for our new groups year ahead. Thanks for taking time out of your busy fall schedule to focus on leading your group!

We want to do everything we can to support you and help you get ready for your first week of group. Please contact us with any questions or concerns. 

Here are 9 essentials to cover before your first week of group.

1. Plan A Group Meal

The best way to start off the group year is by catching up together over a meal. Who doesn't love food.  Connect with your group this week to plan what's for dinner.

2. Connect With Your Group

Make sure to connect with your group about details for your first meeting: location, date, time, kids care. Nothing beats a phone call before the first week to reconnect with your attendees and new prospective group members. Maybe you could meet with new group members in the lobby on Sunday so they have a familiar face their first week in group.

3. Bring A Preassigned Volunteer Schedule
 www.NorthridgeLeaders.com/volunteer-schedule-template

Instead of asking for people to sign up for shared group responsibilities on the first night, bring a preassigned schedule to your first meeting. Let people know they can connect with you as leaders if there is a schedule conflict or a role they are not comfortable serving in. This is a great way to share leadership by sharing responsibilities for snack, childcare, hosting, and even facilitation. 

4. Bring Group Agreements
http://bit.ly/CGAgreement

Make sure to review this with your group the first week of each trimester. 
You can pick up copies of the Beginning of the Trimester Group Agreement at your campus info center this Sunday, or download and print copies that will be included with the sermon discussion questions this week.

5. Bookmark the New Group Leaders Website
www.NorthridgeLeaders.com

This is where you will find Sermon Discussion Questions, the Community Groups blog, leadership documents, previous breakouts, training materials, and more.

6. Register and Update the New Group Database
www.NorthridgeLeaders.com/database/

People are checking out groups online this week. Make sure your group name, time, location, and description are still correct. It would be a bummer to have a new group member show up on the wrong night. 

GROUP VITALS DETAILS

As we mentioned last night at the Group Leader Training, this year we are going to try out Group Vitals, a new Community Groups database that will replace our previous one. 

YOU WILL BE RECEIVING AN EMAIL WITH A REGISTRATION LINK TO CREATE A GROUP VITALS ACCOUNT LATER TODAY. 

SOME OF THE BENEFITs

 1. No login required to take attendance (great when you forget your password)
2. Text message attendance reminders in addition to email reminders
3. Ability to add guests and share notes with your group coach when filling out attendance
4. "Group text" option to communicate with your group
5. Text notifications when someone expresses interest in your group online
6. A map search feature for people looking for a group

GROUP VITALS TUTORIAL VIDEO (5 MINUTES)

 

7. Update Your Coach on Group Changes

Have you added new leaders or new group members, or do you have group members in transition? Let your group coach know so we can update your group roster and make sure any new co-leaders have an opportunity to fill out the Group Leader Application.

8. Fill Out the Group Leader Application
 www.NorthridgeLeaders.com/new-leaders

If you are new to Community Group Leadership and stepping into the role this year, please fill out the Group Leader application found at the link above.

9. Pray For Your Group

Planning goes a long way to help create healthy group environments where people connect, feel cared for, and grow spiritually. God uses our efforts but we are dependent on God to change lives and make us more like Him. 

We are praying for and with you this week! 

 
JasonDeGraaff.PNG

Jason DeGraaff
Community Groups Pastor

Life is better connected!

 
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Preparing For Your Group

Here are 2 quick reminders as we prepare for our fall Community Group trimester beginning on September 17th:

  1. Group Leader Kick-off: Sunday Night, September 10th, 5:00PM-7:15PM

    • You will be receiving an RSVP email shortly

    • Do you have any potential group leaders you'd like to invite to Kick-off? Let me know so we can send them the RSVP invite email.

  2. Community Group Trimester Dates: September 17th - November 17th

    • Group Updates/Changes?

    • Let your group coach know if your group has any changes as we move toward the fall:

      • New/Different Leaders?

        • Roster Updates?

        • Multiplication?

        • New Campus?

        • New Location?

        • New Night?

  • We'd be happy to update your groups profile online and help you think through these changes.

What questions do you have as we approach the fall? 

Praying for you as we prepare for our new groups year.

Jason DeGraaffGroups Pastor

Jason DeGraaff

Groups Pastor

ABC's

2 Reasons Why Community Groups Don't Work

Have you ever been frustrated with the lack of relational depth in your group? Even with the people who show up to group every week?

Does it ever feel like group discussion is just 30 minutes of surface answers but no one is really sharing their life, their struggles, or challenging each other spiritually?

Sometimes it feels like Community Groups just don't work.

The purpose of Community Groups is to Apply the Bible, Build relationships, and Care for each other, but maybe for you it feels like all that is being accomplished is that people are sitting in an awkward circle each week.

Here are 2 reasons Why Community Groups Don't Work

1. You focus on meetings instead of ongoing relationships.

  • When people only see Community Group as an event to attend, your group will struggle.

  • When your only time together begins at snack time and ends after group prayer, your group will struggle.

2. You focus on answering questions instead of sharing your lives.

  • When the goal of discussion time is to get through all of the questions, your group will struggle.

  • When people view group discussion as the time to share right answers, your group will struggle.

How do you fix this?

The goal of Community Group is not to hold good meetings. The goal of Community Groups is to create authentic Biblical community.

Your group can't accomplish the ABC's until you experience community together.

So, how do you create community?

Here are a 6 ideas:

  1. Pray for your Community Group members consistently

    • As you pray for your group, God uses your prayers to increase your love for your group members. Do you struggle to pray regularly? Set a reminder on your phone or use this prayer reminder app: www.prayermate.net

  2. Text your Community Group members at least 1 time a week

    • You don't need to text them all yourself, assign each person to a Group Leader or spiritually mature group member for weekly follow up.

  3. Sit together on Sundays

    • Pick a section in the auditorium, let people know what service you will attend each week, and make a point of sitting together. You could even grab coffee at the cafe together before you find your seats in the service. This is one of the reasons we encourage Northridgers to attend the campus nearest them and attend a group from their campus.

  4. Skip sermon discussion and share your stories

    • Do you really know each other in group? Until you do, answers to discussion questions will probably remain on the surface level. Take a few weeks, or maybe a whole trimester, and take turns sharing your stories and asking follow-up questions.

  5. Assign prayer partners

    • Encourage everyone in prayer time to pair up and connect with their partner one time during the week over a text, phone call, coffee, a meal, or even hanging out at each other's homes.

  6. Invite people into the natural rhythms of your life

    • Birthday parties together

    • Kids band/theater/sporting events together

    • House work or yard work together

    • Eating leftovers together

    • Watching the game together

    • Doing school work in the same place together

    • Date nights together

You can inspire people from a distance, but you can only influence them up close.

Community is developed as you share life together.

Which one of these steps can you take this week to help create Community in your group?

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Why & How to Share Facilitation

One of the most intimidating roles in a Community Group is facilitating discussion. Because of that group leaders often fail to share facilitation fearing it is too difficult or important of a role for other group members. 

5 Ways Failing to Share Facilitation Limits Your Group

  1. Facilitation is seen as something only group leaders can do

  2. Fewer people get in the game and develop facilitation skills

  3. People who are great question askers are stuck on the sidelines

  4. People are too intimidated to consider group leadership because they don't think they could lead good discussions

  5. Groups are unable to multiply for lack of new leaders

The goal of group discussion is not teaching but application. Anyone can ask questions about how to apply the Bible to our lives. 

So, how do you share facilitation with your group members? 

3 Ideas for Sharing Facilitation

  1. Schedule a different person to facilitate discussion each week.

    • Hand out the schedule the first week of group and let people know you'd like everyone or almost everyone to facilitate discussion in group.

    • Let them know that all they need to do is read questions off a piece of paper.

    • Communicate with them that if they are not comfortable leading discussion to have a conversation with you after group.

  2. Send Group Facilitation Guide

    • We have put together a short 1 page Facilitation Guide to email to your leaders the week before they facilitate discussion. This guide includes everything they need to know to lead discussion their first time. 

    • Here is a suggested email to send group members before they facilitate.

  3. Followup After Meeting

    • After group, follow up with the person who facilitated discussion to celebrate and affirm them. Most of us are anxious about doing something new, especially talking in front of others. So do all that you can to encourage and thank them.

    • If you have any suggestions, limit them to one or two at the most.

    • They mostly just need your affirmation that they can do it and they did a good job.

If you have further questions about how to share facilitation in your group, let your group coach know. The more people we can get into the game the better.